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French phonology displays variation due to regional dialects. This article aims at displaying a complete overview of French normal and possible phonemes and their most common allophones.

Phonology

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Vowels

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Front Central Back
NR R NR R
Close i y u
Close-mid e ø ə o
Open-mid ɛ ɛ̃ œ (œ̃) ɔ ɔ̃
Open a (ɑ) ɑ̃


Oral vowels

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IPA Example (IPA) Example (Written) Meaning Notes
i si si "if" This vowel is normally short and tense unlike the Received Pronunciation vowel in meet (which is long) and if (which is the lax [ɪ]).
y sy su "known" The same vowel as [i], but rounded.
u su sous "under" Similar to the English vowel in the word shoot.
e pʁe pré "meadow" In many regions of France, mostly in the South (Meridional French), this vowel and [ɛ] are allophones. In other regions, it is considered a different phoneme; Parisian French, for example, clearly oppose the two phonemes at word endings /tɛ/ (taie, "pillowcase") and /te/ (thé, "tea"). However, the distinction tends to disappear in non-final syllables, where the vowels often follow the distribution, similar to Spanish, of having [e] in open syllables and [ɛ] in closed ones.
ø ceux "these" This vowel and [œ] are almost allophones: usually [ø] is found in open syllables and [œ] in closed ones, although [ø] is also found before [z] in words like chanteuse [ʃɑ̃tøz]. The few minimal pairs include jeune [ʒœn] ("young") and jeûne [ʒøn] ("a fast").
o so sot "silly" This vowel merges with [ɔ] in some dialects, subject to an allophonic repartition that produces [o] in word-final open syllables and [ɔ] in all others. For example: photocopie /fɔ.tɔ.kɔ.pi/, photo /fɔ.to/. However, /oː/ appears even in closed syllables in some dialects, usually corresponding to the spelling "eau", "au" or "ô", although this often depends on the word: Paul, for example, is pronounced [pɔl].
ɛ pʁɛ près "near"
œ sœːʁ sœur "sister"
ɔ sɔːʁ sort "fate"
a pat patte "leg" (of an animal) In many French dialects, this vowel has acquired a more central position owing to a merger with /ɑ/, but other dialects have kept these vowels separated.
ɑ pɑːt pâte "dough" This vowel, almost always long (unless in word-final position), has been lost in many dialects of French through a merger with /a/, but is preserved in other dialects, most notably in Quebec French and Swiss French
ə ce "this" This phoneme has several names, including "e caduc" ("decrepit e") and "e muet" ("mute e"). Being more or less labialized, it is closer to [œ] than to an English [ə]. Modern labialized "e caduc" comes from an unlabialized schwa once used in Old French. It is always dropped ("muet") before another vowel (un(e) âme [ynɑːm]), and usually when following a single consonant (rapp(e)ler [ʁaple]). On the other hand, it is usually pronounced when following two consonants or more (gredin [gʁədɛ̃]).

Nasal vowels

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IPA Example (IPA) Example (Written) Meaning Notes
ɑ̃ sɑ̃ sans "without" The nasalized equivalent of the oral vowel [ɑ]. This vowel is frequently heard as [ã] in Quebec. Some dialects in Northern France have started to merge /ɑ̃/ and /ɔ̃/.
ɔ̃ sɔ̃ son "his, her, its" (m sg) The nasalized equivalent of the oral vowel [ɔ]. One of the most stable vowels, it has few known allophones.
ɛ̃ sɛ̃ saint "saint" The nasalized equivalent of the oral vowel [ɛ]. Many French speakers have merged [œ̃] and [ɛ̃]. This vowel is still separate from /œ̃/ in Quebec French, Belgian French, and Meridional French, and in some of these dialects it has the allophones [ẽ] and [ĩ].
œ̃ bʁœ̃ brun "brown" Many French people have merged [œ̃] and [ɛ̃]. This vowel is still separate from /ɛ̃/ in Quebec French, Belgian French, and Meridional French however, and has the allophone [ũ].

Vowel quantity

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Certain dialects, notably Quebec French and Belgian French, make a distinction between long and short vowels, in final syllables only. The occurrence of long vowels can vary widely among dialects. Generally, the following vowels are long:

  • [ɑ], [o], and [ø], when followed by one or more consonants, e.g. base, [bɑːz]; flamme, [flɑːm]
  • other vowels followed by one of the voiced fricatives ([v z ʒ ʁ]), e.g. sœur, [sœːʁ]; brave, [braːv]
  • nasal vowels followed by one or more consonants, e.g. romance, [ʁɔmɑ̃ːs]; emprunte, [ɑ̃pʁœ̃ːt]

Other vowels are long due to compensatory lengthening: in syllables where a consonant in the syllable coda has been lost, the vowel becomes long. The overwhelming majority of these cases are due to the loss of [s]:

  • Old French /mɛstrə/ > Modern French /mɛːtr/ "maître"
  • Old French /bɛstə/ > Modern French /bɛːt/ "bête"

Consonants

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IPA chart French consonants
Bilabial Labio-
dental
Dental Alveolar Alveolo-
palatal
Palatal Labio-
palatal
Velar Labiovelar Uvular
Plosive p1 b t1 d k1 g
Nasal m n ɲ4 ŋ3
Fricative f   v s   z ʃ   ʒ ʁ2
Approximant j ɥ5 w 5
Lateral l

Where symbols for consonants occur in pairs, the left represents the voiceless consonant and the right represents the voiced consonant.

Notes:

  1. /p/, /t/ and /k/ are never aspirated in French. The designation of /t/, /d/, and /n/ as dental has been disputed. See Dental consonant.
  2. The grapheme r allows a wide range of realizations in French. [ʀ], [ʁ], [r], [ɾ], and [χ] will all be recognized as "r", but most of them will be considered dialectal. For example, [ʀ] is considered typical of a Parisian accent, while [r] is sometimes found in southern France, less and less in the Montréal area and in Cajun French.
  3. The velar nasal is not a native phoneme of French, but occurs in loan words such as parking or camping. Many speakers (mostly old people and those who are not accustomed to this foreign sound) replace it with a prenasalized [ŋg] sequence. In Quebec French, /ɲ/ is pronounced [ŋ], so these loanwords rhyme with ligne and signe. The velar nasal is also heard in the accent of the city of Marseille after nasal vowels, e.g. malin, [malɛ̃ŋ].
  4. /ɲ/ is slowly disappearing in favor of a /nj/ sequence in some dialects
  5. [ɥ] and [w] in French are mostly allophones of [y] and [u] before a vowel. The only case where [w] contrasts with [u] is when there is a morphemic boundary, causing some forms of verbs ending in -oua ([ua] or [uɑ]) such as loua ("he rented") and noua ("he knotted, he tied") to contrast with words ending with the oi ([wa]) diphthong, such as loi ("law"), and noix ("nut").

Examples of French plosive consonants

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IPA Example (IPA) Example (Written) Meaning Notes
p po peau "skin"
b bɑ̃ banc "bench"
t ty tu "you" (singular)
d du doux "soft"
k queue "tail"
g gɛ̃ gain "gain"

Vowel-lengthening consonants

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The consonants ʒ v z/ cause automatic lengthening of the previous vowels. While this is not phonemic in itself, it might cause vowels to change quality in dialects where short and long vowels are of different qualities.


Sounds

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The close front unrounded vowel is a type of vowel sound, used in many spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is i, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is i.

Features

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  • Its vowel height is close, which means the tongue is positioned as close as possible to the roof of the mouth without creating a constriction that would be classified as a consonant.
  • Its vowel backness is front, which means the tongue is positioned as far forward as possible in the mouth without creating a constriction that would be classified as a consonant.
  • Its vowel roundedness is unrounded, which means that the lips are spread.

Occurs in

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The vowel [i] is a very common vowel. It occurs phonemically in almost all languages with three or more vowels, and phonetically it probably occurs in every language. For example:

  • French: fini [fini], "finished"